5 benefits of natural language understanding for healthcare

Ten years ago, Juergen Fritsch, chief scientist at Franklin, Tenn.-based M*Modal, was a postgraduate student at Carnegie Mellon, working on research for the government. “We were focused on a project eavesdropping calls," says Fritsch. "What emotional state [people] were in, and so on. We learned a lot about how people talk about things."

Since then, Fritsch and his colleagues have taken what they learned and developed this into natural language understanding (NLU) technology for healthcare. In a nutshell, NLU refers to a computerized system that can turn spoken and typed words in to structured data.

Fritsch spotlighted five areas where NLU is helping transform healthcare.

1. Conversational documentation. Clinical documentation is an important aspect of a physician’s work. They need to have their notes converted in to clinical information that is actionable, such as a call to prescribe medication. Normally this is done by inputting dictation or text to a computer system. An NLU system can automatically take this information and interpret the narrative documentation (a conversational description of the patient’s visit) to find actionable items.

Using NLU in this capacity can improve the efficiency of the documentation process. According to Fritsch, 60 percent of all clinical documentation is done in an unstructured form that a computer can’t understand. “Just by listening in on a physician conversation saying that they want to put a patient on a specific medication, a computer can take actions on that,” he says.

2. Computer-assisted coding (CAC). Once a doctor treats a patient, someone needs to look at the physician’s notes and assign a billing code in order for the to receive payment. Fritsch says CAC programs that use NLU “under the hood to understand the diseases and the diagnoses” can pull this information from unstructured physician notes and automatically assign a billing code.

“This helps the hospital do billing timely and efficiently, and it helps them get their money sooner,” says Fritsch. He adds that it can help greatly in the transition to implementing ICD-10 billing codes, as a NLU system can understand a conversational description of a diagnosis and check it against ICD-10 listings.

3. Clinical documentation improvement (CDI). Accurately documenting the condition of the patient and what procedures were performed “drives how much money [healthcare providers] get and how soon they get it,” says Fritsch. “If it’s not documented, it didn’t happen.” As procedures and billing codes become more complex, it is easier for a provider to accidentally leave a treatment undocumented, therefore losing the opportunity to receive payment. An NLU system can identify missing, incomplete or inconsistent information in a physician’s documentation.

The above three items are currently being employed in the healthcare industry. The next two are “up and coming” implementations that are not yet in the marketplace, but that are headed that way soon and have potentially large impacts.

4. Clinical decision support (CDS). CDS provides “relevant, abstracted summaries of clinical research results to guide physicians.” A physician can look back on his or her records and see how certain types of treatment affected patients, using CDS to make decisions about future courses of treatment. While this tool currently exists, NLU integration for it does not. Although many hospitals have transitioned to electronic notes from paper, it’s not in what Fritsch calls “computer readable form.” This is where NLU comes in: a doctor can make requests for certain data to be displayed and NLU can pull information from unstructured notes.

5. Interoperability. Moving medical records from one provider to another can cause major gaps in care, even if those records are already electronic. “If you move from the west coast to the east coast and all of your health information is in Word documents, your new provider doesn’t have time to read 20 pages,” Fritsch says. An NLU system can analyze the unstructured document and build lists of patient information like allergies, medications, and medical procedures. The physician can click on those lists and bring up the associated notes, saving them time.

Fritsch points out the usefulness of NLU as health information exchanges become larger and more prevalent. What good is a large database of information in electronic form if it is not easily searchable and structured in a way that is useful for an HIE? NLU’s ability to understand conversational clinical narrative and structure it in a way that a computer can understand enables healthcare providers to effectively use their records across a wide range of technologies.